Chemical hazards always supersede biological hazards. Do not autoclave biohazardous waste that is mixed with chemical hazards. Contact the UWM Environmental Protection Program to discuss your options for disposal.
Medical sharps waste requires special handling because it must be both decontaminated and rendered broken and unable to be reused. This is done by an external contractor via incineration, grinding, and/or shredding. All sharps waste generated at UWM is handled by Madison Environmental Resourcing, Inc.
Always collect sharps in an approved sharps container. When the container is no more than 3/4 full, contact the UWM Environmental Protection Program for pickup of the sharps container. UWM Environmental Protection personnel will coordinate with Madison Environmental Resourcing, Inc, for final pickup and disposal of the waste.
Whenever possible, dispose of these items as medical sharps to reduce injury that can result from increased handling of these materials.
If disposal in a sharps container for pickup is not possible, use the following precautions to decontaminate and dispose of these items in a manner that prevents harm:
- Collect the items in a hard-sided container. Ensure that the container used for collection can also be used for decontamination such that materials do not need to be handled prior to decontaminating. For example, use an autoclave-safe container if materials will be decontaminated by autoclaving.
- Decontaminate the materials by autoclaving or by appropriate use of a chemical disinfectant. Autoclaving is preferred.
- After materials have been decontaminated, close the container and label as “broken glass and plastic” before disposal in the general waste stream.
Waste generated in biological laboratories that has not been contaminated with or come into contact with any biohazardous materials may be disposed of in the general trash. However, always remember to consider other hazards associated with your waste that may require special disposal, such as chemical hazards, radiological hazards, or broken glass.
In general, items that are not considered to be infectious waste may include:
- Items soiled but not saturated with human blood or body fluids
- Body fluids that are generally not considered to be infectious, such as urine, mucus, sweat, saliva, or tears
- Tissue, blood, body fluids, or cultures from animals that are not known to be carrying or infected with a zoonotic infectious agent
- Containers, packages, waste glass, lab equipment, and other materials that have had no contact with blood, body fluids, clinical cultures, or infectious agents
- Formerly infectious waste after it has been properly treated
Labs are responsible for moving the waste from their labs to the appropriate dumpsters outside of their buildings. Never dispose of laboratory waste in hallway trash cans. Safely transport your waste using a cart or wheeled garbage can to the nearest dumpster for disposal on a regular basis to avoid waste buildup that can lead to lab contamination or nuisance odors.
Report all biohazardous material spills using the Biosafety Initial Report Form. Prompt reporting to state or federal agencies may be required depending on the nature of the spill, so ensure that a report is submitted as soon as possible and within 24 hours.
All labs that work with biohazardous materials must maintain standard procedures for spill cleanup. These procedures should be visibly posted inside the lab. The UWM Institutional Biosafety Committee has created and approved general biohazardous spill guidelines for UWM. Your lab may use these guidelines and/or alter them as needed based on your specific materials and procedures.